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WAHLEN, GEORGE EDWARD
Rank and organization:
Pharmacist's Mate Second
Class, U.S. Navy,
serving with 2d
Battalion, 26th Marines,
5th Marine Division.
Place and date: Iwo
Jima, Volcano Islands
group, 3 March 1945.
Entered service at:
Utah. Born: 8 August
1924, Ogden, Utah.
Citation: For
conspicuous gallantry
and intrepidity at the
risk of his life above
and beyond the call of
duty while serving with
the 2d Battalion, 26th
Marines, 5th Marine
Division, during action
against enemy Japanese
forces on Iwo Jima in
the Volcano group on 3
March 1945. Painfully
wounded in the bitter
action on 26 February,
Wahlen remained on the
battlefield, advancing
well forward of the
frontlines to aid a
wounded marine and
carrying him back to
safety despite a
terrific concentration
of fire. Tireless in his
ministrations, he
consistently disregarded
all danger to attend his
fighting comrades as
they fell under the
devastating rain of
shrapnel and bullets,
and rendered prompt
assistance to various
elements of his combat
group as required. When
an adjacent platoon
suffered heavy
casualties, he defied
the continuous pounding
of heavy mortars and
deadly fire of enemy
rifles to care for the
wounded, working rapidly
in an area swept by
constant fire and
treating 14 casualties
before returning to his
own platoon. Wounded
again on 2 March, he
gallantly refused
evacuation, moving out
with his company the
following day in a
furious assault across
600 yards of open
terrain and repeatedly
rendering medical aid
while exposed to the
blasting fury of
powerful Japanese guns.
Stouthearted and
indomitable, he
persevered in his
determined efforts as
his unit waged fierce
battle and, unable to
walk after sustaining a
third agonizing wound,
resolutely crawled 50
yards to administer
first aid to still
another fallen fighter.
By his dauntless
fortitude and valor,
Wahlen served as a
constant inspiration and
contributed vitally to
the high morale of his
company during critical
phases of this
strategically important
engagement. His heroic
spirit of self-sacrifice
in the face of
overwhelming enemy fire
upheld the highest
traditions of the U.S.
Naval Service. |